“We’re not going to get carried away because when you do that, that’s when it normally goes to pot.”

Sinnott started at Huddersfield when he was 15 and was given a two-year scholarship and then a one-year professional contract before he made his debut in the FA Cup fourth round against Leicester aged 18.

He then went on loan to Bury aged 19 but got a dislocated knee injury that kept him out for four months

“Before I went for the scan my head was all over the place,” he said.

“The physio told me he thought I’d done my cruciate, which means a year out, so it actually wasn’t that bad in the end.

“They said they weren’t going to offer me another contract when my existing one expired so I went to Altrincham.

“That was the first major injury I’d had so I wasn’t used to being out, but I got my head down with the good physios they have at Huddersfield and managed to come back fit.

“It’s hard to tell whether I’d have stayed at Huddersfield but for that injury but I’m just focused on the future.

“It probably made me the player I am now because it was a setback - I wasn’t used to looking after myself, not being able to play or train.

“You’re in the club six days a week, which I didn’t mind because I wanted to get back.”

Sinnott admits the transition from the Huddersfeld youth team to non-league first-team football took some getting used to.

“I found it a bit tough - I thought it’d be a lot easier getting back fit,” he added.

“It was a bit of an eye-opener but I hit the ground running the next season and played nearly every league game.

“That’s stood me in good stead. The league was a bit different to what I was used to at Huddersfield, where you got a bit more time on the ball and they want you to play a bit more.

“Sometimes the teams you play in non-league are more direct, which is a bit frustrating, but that’s how it is.

“It was a learning curve but I enjoyed it.

“I ended up playing half the season at right-back - I can play there because they were trying to look at me there at Huddersfield as well.